Apple has seeded the first public beta of iOS 26.6, iPadOS 26.6, macOS Tahoe 26.6, watchOS 26.6 and tvOS 26.6 to testers. The public beta arrived two days after Apple pushed the same builds to developers, which is a fairly standard cadence. Those signed up through Apple’s public beta programme can grab the update through the Software Update section in Settings on each respective device.
The update is a minor one as Apple is clearly saving its energy for WWDC 2026, which kicks off on 8 June, just 11 days away, where iOS 27 and a full slate of next-generation software will be unveiled. iOS 26.6 is shaping up to be primarily a bug-fix and security release, with only two feature-level changes spotted so far.
The first change is an alert that appears when you have blocked too many contacts. The limit is set in the thousands, so the majority of users will never see this notification in practice. It is more of a hygiene case than a feature most people will interact with.
The more interesting discovery is a potential anti-theft feature that appears to be in development. The feature reportedly locks the iPhone automatically if it detects it has been snatched, which would add a meaningful layer of protection in theft scenarios. It is not yet clear whether this will ship fully formed in iOS 26.6 or is still being built out for a later release.
Apple has flagged one known bug in this beta: sticker data can become corrupted, preventing you from creating new stickers or viewing existing ones. The issue can also carry over to other devices synced via iCloud, so it is worth being aware of if stickers are part of your regular workflow.
iOS 26.6 will be the final point release in Apple’s current software cycle before attention shifts entirely to iOS 27. For context, iOS 18.6 beta 1 arrived after iOS 26 beta 1 last year, so this build is slightly ahead of Apple’s usual schedule. The full iOS 27 reveal is expected at the WWDC keynote on 8 June, with a public release to follow in September alongside new iPhone hardware.